Temptaliahttp://www.temptalia.com
A beauty blog dedicated to bringing you the latest makeup news, makeup reviews, and beauty tips. We cover MAC makeup news, Urban Decay, Chanel, NARS Cosmetics, and much more!Sat, 10 Dec 2016 02:46:39 +0000en-UShourly1https://wordpress.org/?v=4.6.1Giorgio Armani Moonlight (12) Eyes to Kill Intense Eyeshadow Review, Photos, Swatcheshttp://www.temptalia.com/giorgio-armani-moonlight-12-eyes-to-kill-intense-eyeshadow-review-photos-swatches/
http://www.temptalia.com/giorgio-armani-moonlight-12-eyes-to-kill-intense-eyeshadow-review-photos-swatches/#commentsMon, 25 Apr 2011 16:00:40 +0000Christinehttp://www.temptalia.com/?p=29412Giorgio Armani Moonlight (12) Eyes to Kill Intense Eyeshadow Pretty in Pink Turns Silver! Giorgio Armani Moonlight (12) Eyes to Kill Intense Eyeshadow ($32.00 for 0.14 oz.) is a bright, metallic silver with a subtle blueness. It's interesting how it looks pink and silvery-blue in the pot, but once applied, it's this grayer silver but still with noticeable blue in it. Recap: This is a product that lives up to its claims--it wears all day without budging, creasing, or fading--and blends as well on its own as it does with other eyeshadows (or on top of an eyeshadow base). Giorgio Continue Reading… ]]>Giorgio Armani Moonlight (12) Eyes to Kill Intense Eyeshadow

Recap:

This is a product that lives up to its claims–it wears all day without budging, creasing, or fading–and blends as well on its own as it does with other eyeshadows (or on top of an eyeshadow base). Giorgio Armani describes the Eyes to Kill Intense formula as neither powder nor cream but a hybrid that creates a “smooth, lasting color film” that can be applied wet or dry. Giorgio Armani explains, “Each shade is intensified with a second pigment for a multi-dimensional effect. In just one swoop, create a wet, shimmering smokey eye … Base color covers eyelid, and second pigment adds drama to the contour.”

The texture of these feels almost like a cream eyeshadow, but it has the thinness of a powder eyeshadow while retaining some of the blendability of the hybrid cream-powder eyeshadow. It also works well with other eyeshadow (see this look using #6). It’s almost like a really dense loose powder that’s been pressed down, because if you dig at it, it loosens.

Though pricey, each shade comes with 0.14 oz. worth of product, which is a hefty amount (normal eyeshadow averages around 0.05 oz., no matter the price). The only aspect I didn’t love was the little black stopper inside the jar (once you unscrew the black lid), because my longer fingers felt awkward grabbing it (so I just unscrew it upside down so it falls into the cap).